Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation

What Is an Innovation Program Office?


Listen Later

Today’s show is going to be a look behind the scenes around the time when I took over as CTO at HP.  This time is so important because it is the time that I came up with the concept “The Innovation Program Office.”  In today’s show we will talk about the pros and cons of the “IPO”, what are some of the things you need to think about regarding the “IPO”, and will it work for you?  The concept of “IPO” still applies today, and hopefully by the end of the show you will have your own insight of how it can apply to what you are trying to do in the organizations you serve.

History
A lot of traditional teams set up to “do innovation” by creating an innovation team.  This makes the innovation team a target because people not on the team no longer saw innovation as part of their job.  What a lot of organizations experienced was that it was hard to scale. Scaling is the key factor because scaling limits impact.  Even with major significant support, no organization can grow a dedicated team large enough.  Innovation is not a team of people where you have an innovation program office, innovation is around a capability that an organization can and should have that is part of that core of how you do things.  New teams need to show innovation value right away with a near zero team members. Most likely you will have zero funding yet, you need to show an early win. How do new teams do this? By getting others to support them.

Let them get credit for the early wins.
Be viewed as a resource to help.
Let the group benefit (new product, revenue, marketplace credit, etc.).

If you are in the innovation game and it is all about you getting the credit, the odds of you being successful in this game are near zero if not zero.  
Role of the Innovation Program Office
The role takes on many forms but the role of the “IPO” is establishing the innovation framework, securing the funding, project selection and tracking, and training and supporting the teams as they innovate.  The first thing the “IPO” needs to establish is the framework that the broader organization will align around. You need to adapt the framework to the language of the organization.  Getting others to adapt it is a “change management” process. At HP the gradual roll-out to get the framework established takes over two years for 20,000 employees. Once you have the framework in place, you need to look at the metrics.  Understand how executive decisions are made and adapt metrics to it. Test your “alpha metrics” against yourself and against your peers.

Does it reveal something?
If you have the info int eh past, would you have made different decisions?

Your objective is to find metrics that are:

Predictive of future challenges and opportunities.
Give you enough foresight to change directions and have an impact.
Satisfies the “fear” response from execs.
Prove to management that innovation can be managed.

Key with funding in the “IPO” is to move it from underneath the normal budget process and control.  Once you have the metrics it is much easier to secure the funding. Start small, prove yourself, and grow the funding.  Look forwards to what you will do not what you have done in the past. Remember that you are competing for money that could be used in other ways.  Next is project selection and tracking:

Define the criteria for project selection.
We used ranking questions.
Create their own.
Re-evaluate the selections to improve how you identify the projects that will have the biggest impact.

Once you have everything in place: the framework, metrics,
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And InnovationBy Phil McKinney

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

74 ratings


More shows like Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation

View all
Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders (ETL) by Stanford eCorner

Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders (ETL)

710 Listeners

HBR IdeaCast by Harvard Business Review

HBR IdeaCast

177 Listeners

Coaching for Leaders by Dave Stachowiak

Coaching for Leaders

1,459 Listeners

a16z Podcast by Andreessen Horowitz

a16z Podcast

1,030 Listeners

The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish by Shane Parrish

The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish

2,640 Listeners

Founders by David Senra

Founders

1,877 Listeners

Make Me Smart by Marketplace

Make Me Smart

5,490 Listeners

Masters of Scale by WaitWhat

Masters of Scale

3,995 Listeners

Choiceology with Katy Milkman by Charles Schwab

Choiceology with Katy Milkman

1,431 Listeners

Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People by Guy Kawasaki

Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People

656 Listeners

All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg by All-In Podcast, LLC

All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg

9,095 Listeners

Coaching Real Leaders by Harvard Business Review / Muriel Wilkins

Coaching Real Leaders

650 Listeners

The AI Daily Brief (Formerly The AI Breakdown): Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis by Nathaniel Whittemore

The AI Daily Brief (Formerly The AI Breakdown): Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis

462 Listeners

HBR On Strategy by Harvard Business Review

HBR On Strategy

84 Listeners

HBR On Leadership by Harvard Business Review

HBR On Leadership

151 Listeners